Goldendawn8
Yellow Belt
Does anyone know how accurately it followed history?
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Historical inaccuracies aside, I was under the impression that Ken Watanabe was a well-respected actor in Japan. :idunno:I used Last Samurai in a class once. The students, all Japanese, had to write a review and compare it with Tasogare Seibei, the Japanese original of Twilight Samurai. They pretty unanimously preferred the latter, mainly because it was much more believable than Tom Cruise and Ken Watanabe.
Historical inaccuracies aside, I was under the impression that Ken Watanabe was a well-respected actor in Japan. :idunno:
Think about Louis Gossett Jr and many others here in the USA. Sometimes, I look at roles that some very talented actors and actresses take, and wonder if they really needed the money that bad, or just wanted out of the house!He is. But he mainly does low- brow type stuff. Even Toshiro Mifune caught hell for his work in Shogun. Just because an actor can act does not mean they know what they are acting about.
There are pleasant surprises, occasionally, when it comes to Hollywood and history.
On Veterans Day I watched the last part of "Sergeant York" and googled it after the movie showed him escorting 132 prisoners he captured with seven men while taking out a machine gun nest.
I thought it was amazing, so I googled it to see if it was a true story and how embellished that story might have been by Hollywood.
Turns out Corporal York (promoted to Sgt. after he war) was very much like the movie depicted him to be (a pacifist who objected to the war) and really DID capture 132 men with only seven other men, killing some 40 in the process.
Asked why he killed those men if he was a pacifist, he explained he figured that nest would have killed thousands if someone didn't do something about it.
An amazing story I might never have heard about if not for the Hollywood film.